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Ovarian hormones through Wnt signalling regulate the growth of human and mouse ovarian cancer initiating lesions

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posted on 2025-05-11, 12:58 authored by Prathima B. Nagendra, Jyoti Goad, Sarah Nielsen, Loui Rassam, Janine LombardJanine Lombard, Pravin NaharPravin Nahar, Pradeep TanwarPradeep Tanwar
Ovarian cancer (OC) is the most deadly gynaecological disease largely because the majority of patients are asymptomatic and diagnosed at later stages when cancer has spread to other vital organs. Therefore, the initial stages of this disease are poorly characterised. Women with BRCA1/2 mutations have a genetic predisposition for developing OC, but not all of these women develop the disease. Epidemiological findings show that lifestyle factors such as contraceptive use and pregnancy, a progesterone dominant state, decrease the risk of getting OC. How ovarian hormones modify the risk of OC is currently unclear. Our study identifies activated Wnt signalling to be a marker for precursor lesions of OC and successfully develops a mouse model that mimics the earliest events in pathogenesis of OC by constitutively activating ßcatenin. Using this model and human OC cells, we show that oestrogen promotes and progesterone suppresses the growth of OC cells.

Funding

NHMRC

ARC

History

Journal title

OncoTarget

Volume

7

Issue

40

Pagination

64836-64853

Publisher

Impact Journals

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Health and Medicine

School

School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy

Rights statement

This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License (Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License).

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